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Agriculture and the Agriculture and the Land Land • Open-Field System • Agricultural Revolution • Leadership of the Low Countries and England • The Cost of Enclosure

Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

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Page 1: Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

Agriculture and the LandAgriculture and the Land

• Open-Field System

• Agricultural Revolution

• Leadership of the Low Countries and England

• The Cost of Enclosure

Page 2: Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

Open-Field SystemOpen-Field System

• Cut field into long narrow strips.

• Fortunate individual peasant families could own a few strips scattered throughout the large field.

• Peasants farmed the field as a community following the same patterns of plowing, sowing and harvesting.

• Soil exhaustion was common due to lack of fertilizer.

Page 3: Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

Open-Field SystemOpen-Field System

• Three year rotations were introduced to give the exhausted soil time to recover.

• Villages maintained open meadows for hay and natural pastures.

• In Eastern Europe, the peasants were still bound to their lords in hereditary service.

• Privileges of Europe’s rulers weighed heavily on the people of the land.

Page 4: Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

Agricultural RevolutionAgricultural Revolution

• Radical mass action became a way for peasants to improve their status.

• Technological progress also presented opportunities.

• Nitrogen-storing crops such as: peas, beans, turnips, potatoes, clovers and grasses were discovered to have the power to replenish the fallow land.

Page 5: Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

Agricultural RevolutionAgricultural Revolution

• Continual experimentation led to more scientific farming.

• This meant cattle and sheep were being fed more, making them larger and allowing for a greater breeding capacity.

• More manure was now available to be used a fertilizer for the crops, giving the peasants a better existence.

• These new methods were very slowly accepted.

Page 6: Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

The Leadership of the Low The Leadership of the Low Countries and EnglandCountries and England

• Low Countries-• Low countries had advanced agricultural

systems.• They had advanced drainage and larger

livestock• Overpopulation=> a need for a good

agricultural system.• Amsterdam grew from 30,000 to 200,000.

Page 7: Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

The Leadership of the Low The Leadership of the Low Countries and EnglandCountries and England

• England-• Cornelius Vermuyden, directed large drainage

projects in England.• Charles Townsend discovered clovers and turnips,

that could grow in sandy soil.• Jethro Tull, invented drills that could plant seeds,

and cross breeding.• 300% more food in 1700 with only a slight worker

increase.

Page 8: Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

The Cost of EnclosureThe Cost of Enclosure

• Wealthy landowners split up, and enclosed property

• Landless peasants could no longer farm common land.

• 1700’s a majority of peasants were either landless, rented land, or had small plots of land.

• Landlords sponsored advanced farming techniques.

Page 9: Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

The Cost of EnclosureThe Cost of Enclosure

• Tenants were the first to use drainage systems and machines.

• By 1815 English and Scottish lords owned most of the land.

• Landless peasants worked on other people’s farms.

• Proletarianization-peasants became rural wage workers.

Page 10: Agriculture and the Land Open-Field System Agricultural Revolution Leadership of the Low Countries and England The Cost of Enclosure

THE ENDTHE END